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authorBdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com>2010-02-06 18:35:05 -0700
committerBdale Garbee <bdale@gag.com>2010-02-06 18:35:05 -0700
commit784473e62a3a55e7d655af90601bc60f746668a0 (patch)
tree67e5519d32c0b144bf933ef178552f50defe2800 /Radio
parentc1bd760a050cbfd374ea1be98d85a08f9a242cd0 (diff)
typo
Diffstat (limited to 'Radio')
-rw-r--r--Radio/index.mdwn4
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/Radio/index.mdwn b/Radio/index.mdwn
index 849b44f..8a54ae3 100644
--- a/Radio/index.mdwn
+++ b/Radio/index.mdwn
@@ -21,8 +21,8 @@ Federal Communications Commission, or [FCC](http://fcc.gov/). Under various
sections of the FCC rules, particularly Part 15, it is possible to design
and build radios that can be used
without each user needing to hold an FCC license. Complying with those
-regulations isn't trivial and isn't cheap. Forunately, there is an
-alternative.
+regulations isn't trivial and can get expensive. Fortunately, there is
+an alternative.
FCC Part 97 and its equivalent in
other countries define an "amateur radio" (sometimes called "ham radio")